Forbes Lists

Profile

Saïd’s 1-year MBA program emphasizes experiential learning. Saïd students begin their first of four terms, which each last about three months, by taking all core classes. In their second term, all students complete an entrepreneurship project, for which they prepare a startup business plan and present it to venture capitalists. Students head back to the classroom for their third term, taking all electives. And in the final term, students complete a strategic consulting project, in which they work with nonprofits, startups and corporations all over the world. Oxford has hosted the Silicon Valley Comes to Oxford program for most of the past 15 years. It brings tech executives to campus to host classes, dinners and debates. More »

What Alumni Are Saying

The Oxford MBA is very intense but gives the best value in every sense. It is diverse ethnically and in terms of classmates experience. Not to underestimate, you tap into the full benefit from the Oxford university as a whole.

Abdel

The value of the MBA degree from The University of Oxford is a door-opener in emerging markets. It gives you solid credibility and makes your CV stand out.

Alexander

They do a wonderful job of bringing together a globally diverse group of people and create a collaborative environment in which to learn. Put on top of that the wonderful quirks of the Oxford University experience and you have an MBA like no other.

Jake

The business school benefits massively from being integrated with Oxford University as a whole. It's more than a business education in a bubble, you're mixed with people of different ages, diverse backgrounds, and varying fields of study. Plus there's a lot of culture and history that make the place, and consequently the experience, unique and once-in-a-lifetime.

Matt

More on Forbes

Whilst studying at Oxford University three years ago, Agne Milukaite, like the rest of the local student community, used a bike to get around the city. And what was second nature to the native Lithuanian who hailed from a ‘biking town’ became the germ of an idea for an online bike-sharing scheme.

$11 billion dollars worth of blockchain companies are coming out of one major network found in universities around the world. Read about millionaire Jeremy Gardner’s life, and the Blockchain Education Network that brings students together to build businesses off of this new technology. read »

The recent gyrations in U.S. equities reflect confusion about how inflation works. Everyone wonders why, despite very low unemployment and a budget-busting combination of lower taxes and more government spending, we still see so little consumer price pressure. The underappreciated fact is that …. read »

For two decades, Harvard’s Clayton Christensen has been predicting that disruptive innovations would impact management education—and that even the likes of the Harvard Business School would feel their might. That no longer feels so far away or like a crazy prediction. read »

On Monday night, Industria, a satellite hub for New York Fashion Week 2018, transformed into Wakanda, a fictional third-world African nation dreamt up by Marvel Studios for its latest film, “Black Panther.” The movie house joined forces with a handful of fashion houses to celebrate the pan-African styles featured in the film. read »

The future shape of graduate and executive education is being shaped by the surge of “MicroMasters” on edX, to which 1.7 million students have registered. The number of programs on offer has exploded from one to 46. This is the kind of exponential growth that disrupts and rebuilds industries. read »

MBA students are increasingly interested in combining business goals with a desire to make a positive social impact. This could have a big impact on our ability to truly tackle the big environmental and social issues of our day. read »